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Bear market investing

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4. How to spot the appearance of a bear market

No bell rings to announce the start of a bear market and bull markets often begin in similar muted fashion.

But the final phase of a bull market, which precedes the start of a bear market, is usually accompanied by a number of signals:

Major phases of a bear market

Historically, major bear markets have also followed distinct patterns.

  1. First phase
    There is a sharp initial fall that removes much of the 'froth' from the market.
  2. Middle phase
    There is a strong rally in prices for several months, which may lull some investors into thinking that the bear market is over. The rallies can be dramatic, but have lower trading volume than the initial sell-offs. And the advances tend to be concentrated on a few selected stocks, not the whole market.
  3. Third phase
    There is a long slow downward grind in prices, accompanied by low volume and periodic false dawns until the bear phase ends quietly as share valuations reach rock bottom. At this point, few investors from the earlier buoyant phase in the market are interested in anything other than the most conservative investments.

Once started, bear markets rarely finish without at least a 40% decline in prices from the previous bull market peak. Often it is substantially more than this, sometimes as much as 80% or 90%. The bottom of the early 1970's bear was 50% below the peak. The 1929-33 bear market saw the Dow Jones index fall to around an eighth of its 1929 peak.

The average length of bear markets is frequently said to be around 16 months, but this average includes short 'corrections' such as the 1987 'crash'. Major bear markets typically occur after a decade of rising share prices, and last for about four years.

Recommend Reading

Quote

"5{t coming, S.E.C. or not, a whole new round of disastrous speculation, with all the familiar stages in order - blue-chip boom, then a fad for secondary issues, then an over-the-counter play, then another garbage market in new issues, and finally the inevitable crash. I don't know when it will come, but I can feel it coming, and damn it, I don't know what to do about it."
Bernard J. Lasker



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